Pills and Power
Before it fueled boardrooms and builders, revolutions and writers, coffee was a humble cherry growing wild in the highlands of Ethiopia. In this episode, we trace the epic journey of coffee from its legendary beginnings to the bustling markets of Yemen and the sacred streets of Mecca, where it became more than a drink, it became a debate. We explore how it spread through the mighty Ottoman Empire, where coffee houses blossomed into buzzing hubs of politics, poetry and power. Then Europe got a taste. In cities like London, coffee houses earned the nickname “penny universities” because for the price of a cup, you could access a world of ideas. Merchants, philosophers and future industrialists gathered under ceilings thick with steam and ambition. We unpack how coffee sharpened minds during the Industrial Revolution, replaced ale at breakfast, and even led to the very first law recognising coffee breaks at work.Sources: https://www.britannica.com/topic/coffee-production [https://www.britannica.com/topic/coffee-production] https://time.com/archive/6870354/business-the-unpaid-coffee-break/ [https://time.com/archive/6870354/business-the-unpaid-coffee-break/] https://medium.com/@VocalJournalist/coffee-has-become-the-drink-of-productivity-and-not-just-in-the-office-bfeda0294826 [https://medium.com/@VocalJournalist/coffee-has-become-the-drink-of-productivity-and-not-just-in-the-office-bfeda0294826] https://www.history.com/articles/coffee-history-facts [https://www.history.com/articles/coffee-history-facts]
21 episodios
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